It is a multiple, and possibly could be the LCM.
This product is called a multiple of the original number.
A multiple of any number would be the product of that number and any other nonzero whole number. A multiple of 4 is 8. A multiple of 100 is 300.
A nonzero multiple of a number is a multiple which is not equal to 0.
The product of two nonzero whole numbers will be a nonzero whole number.
No, because the number of common multiples of any two nonzero numbers is infinite.
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This product is called a multiple of the original number.
An integral multiple of the number that you started with.
Every nonzero number has multiples. Every set of nonzero numbers has an LCM.
A multiple of any number would be the product of that number and any other nonzero whole number. A multiple of 4 is 8. A multiple of 100 is 300.
That's the least common multiple, or LCM.
A nonzero multiple of a number is a multiple which is not equal to 0.
A number - which would also be the case if the second number were 0. The result is called the product or the multiple.
Non zero whole number, with a magnitude greater than any of the numbers.
Oh, dude, the product of two or more nonzero whole numbers is just the result you get when you multiply them together. It's like when you combine a bunch of numbers and they have a little math party, and the product is the final number that comes out of it. So, yeah, it's just the fancy math way of saying "the answer you get when you multiply stuff."